The Diversity Visa Program Just Changed. Here Is What Every Applicant Needs to Know. - Greener Educational Consult

Greener Educational Consult helps students achieve their dream of studying at world-class universities in the USA, UK, Canada, China, and Europe. We provide expert guidance in admissions, scholarship applications, visa support, statement of purpose and CV development, and personalized mentorship to help you secure fully funded opportunities.

The Diversity Visa Program Just Changed. Here Is What Every Applicant Needs to Know.

The Diversity Visa Program Just Changed

The Diversity Visa Program Just Changed. Here Is What Every Applicant Needs to Know.

New documentation requirements, stricter fraud prevention, and an automatic disqualification rule are now in effect. If you are planning to enter the DV lottery, read this before the next cycle opens.

Effective April 10, 2026: The U.S. Department of State has published a final rule introducing new requirements for the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program. Entries submitted without a valid passport scan beginning with DV-2028 will be automatically disqualified.

What Is the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program?

The Diversity Immigrant Visa Program, commonly known as the DV lottery, is a U.S. government initiative that makes up to 55,000 immigrant visas available each year to nationals from countries with historically low rates of immigration to the United States. It is one of the few legal pathways to U.S. permanent residence that does not require a job offer, family sponsor, or employer petition.

The program has long attracted millions of entrants from across Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe. But the entry process has now changed in ways that will directly affect eligibility going forward.

Any entry submitted without a valid, unexpired passport scan will be automatically disqualified. There is no exception and no opportunity to correct an incomplete entry after it is submitted.

What Changed Under the New Rule?

The State Department has introduced three significant changes that all applicants must understand before the DV-2028 entry window opens.

01
Passport Requirement at Entry
Beginning with DV-2028, all applicants must upload a valid, unexpired passport when submitting their online entry. Entries submitted without a passport scan are automatically disqualified with no option to appeal or resubmit. If you or a family member does not currently hold a valid passport, obtaining one before the entry window opens is no longer optional.
02
Enhanced Fraud Prevention Measures
The rule introduces new procedures to detect duplicate, manipulated, or incomplete entries. The State Department has formally codified its authority to deny entry to individuals who do not meet its integrity standards. What was previously handled on a case-by-case basis is now a defined part of the governing rule, giving officials clearer grounds to act on suspicious submissions.
03
Clarified Eligibility Standards
The final rule formalizes eligibility standards and integrity measures proposed in earlier rulemaking. These are now officially part of the governing framework. Applicants who previously submitted entries without facing these requirements should not assume the same process applies going forward.

Who This Affects Most

The passport requirement will be the most immediate barrier for applicants in countries where passport processing times are long or where access to passport offices is limited. In several countries across West Africa, East Africa, and parts of Asia, passport renewal backlogs have historically created delays of several months.

If you are planning to enter the DV-2028 lottery, begin the passport process now. Do not wait until the entry window opens to discover that your passport has expired or that your country's passport office has a waiting list.

  • Check your passport expiry date immediately. If it expires within the next 12 months, begin the renewal process now.
  • If you do not yet hold a passport, start the application process well in advance of the DV-2028 entry window.
  • Only submit entries on the official U.S. government DV lottery website. Third-party services that charge fees for submission are not authorized.
  • Never submit more than one entry per person. Duplicate entries are grounds for disqualification.

If You Are Also Applying to Graduate Programs in the United States

Many of the students we work with at Greener Educational Consult are navigating graduate admissions and immigration questions at the same time. This is common, and it is also where confusion tends to arise.

A student visa and an immigrant visa are not interchangeable. They serve different purposes, operate under different legal frameworks, and pursuing both paths simultaneously requires careful planning. For students applying to Masters or PhD programs in the United States while also considering the DV lottery, the timelines and documentation requirements of each process need to be understood separately.

Graduate admissions strategy, program selection, document preparation, and visa planning each involve decisions that affect the others. If you are in this position and want a clear picture of how to approach your U.S. graduate application alongside your immigration planning, the right starting point is a direct conversation with our team.

We assess your full profile, your target programs, your timeline, and the specific decisions you are facing. From that assessment, we give you a clear, honest picture of your next steps.

Greener Educational Consult

Navigating U.S. graduate admissions while managing immigration questions?

Book a free 30-minute consultation. We assess your profile, your target programs, and your timeline and give you a strategy that accounts for your full situation.

Book a Free Consultation

Free · 30 Minutes · No obligation

    JOIN THE MENTORSHIP
    [wppayform id="6894"]